Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Start-ups get new wings to fly

PM Modi’s ambitious plan marks a new chapter for India. Some reality checks may be in order

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There was an infectious air of optimism, energy and pride at the Vigyan Bhavan as Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the “Start-up India” initiative, the first of its kind to boost new-age entreprene­urship. Its action plan looks like a mini-budget accompanie­d by promises and words of courage from policy-makers. It takes statesmanl­y imaginatio­n to paraphrase Swami Vivekanand­a’s “Arise, Awaken” call into a 21st Century corporate mission, and Mr. Modi deserves due credit for it. There is little doubt that it catches the pulse of India’s young entreprene­ur community.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley positioned his government as the antithesis of the Licence Permit Raj as he stood on a podium that had a cool Silicon Valley-like slogan (“We Unobstacle”). The presence of internatio­nal and home-grown “can-do” entreprene­urs is seen as a coming-out party for an India long seen as a land of cyber-coolies who write cheap software code turning into one that builds innovative, worldclass companies. Mr. Jaitley suggested that the entreprene­urial fervour in India may be a new engine of growth amid clouds over economies in parts of the world. In the spirit of disruption, the government’s action plan in some ways pre-empted the next budget as it promised a no-tax-on-profits regime for start-ups for three years, exemption from capital gains for money ploughed back into start-ups, easy registrati­on, lower patent charges, a `10,000-crore start-up fund and an easy exit policy for shut-downs. That is like a dream come true for angel investors and venture capital funds who fuel start-ups.

However, reality checks are in order. The day-long event also saw some hard questionin­g on whether the current wave of Internet-driven start-ups are in a financial bubble, understand­ably so given the memories of the “dotcom” meltdown. Also, it is legitimate to wonder how the start-ups as defined by the government and enjoying special goodies are treated as a subset of small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs). For the government, the challenge is to see that it removes obstacles in a fair way, so that blue-eyed boys of the industry do not run roughshod over their less fancied entreprene­urial cousins or help tax evaders exploit legal loopholes meant to encourage risk-taking innovators and job-spinners. As an old saying goes, a revolution­ary is a dreamer with his feet firmly on the ground.

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